Lucidity and Reading: A German Lucid Dreamer’s Report

In the year 1938 there appeared, in a German academic journal on psychology, an article describing a series of twenty—two lucid dreams experienced by Harold von Moers-Messmer.In his dream life Moers—Messmer exhibits an unusually observant, objective, experiment—minded personality. Many of his experi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gilmore, Edith
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Lucidity Letter 1983
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.macewan.ca/lucidity/article/view/606
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spelling ftmacewanuojs:oai:journals.macewan.ca:article/606 2023-07-02T03:31:56+02:00 Lucidity and Reading: A German Lucid Dreamer’s Report Gilmore, Edith 1983-07-01 application/pdf https://journals.macewan.ca/lucidity/article/view/606 eng eng Lucidity Letter https://journals.macewan.ca/lucidity/article/view/606/520 https://journals.macewan.ca/lucidity/article/view/606 Copyright (c) 2016 Lucidity Letter Lucidity Letter; Vol. 2 No. 3 (1983) info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 1983 ftmacewanuojs 2023-06-11T17:42:09Z In the year 1938 there appeared, in a German academic journal on psychology, an article describing a series of twenty—two lucid dreams experienced by Harold von Moers-Messmer.In his dream life Moers—Messmer exhibits an unusually observant, objective, experiment—minded personality. Many of his experiences are typical —the incongruous detail that alerts one to the dream state, the brightly colored environment, the prickling sensation (“like dipping one’s arm into a bath of carbonic acid bubbles” says the doctor), and the ability to fly. Article in Journal/Newspaper Carbonic acid MacEwan Open Journals (MacEwan University)
institution Open Polar
collection MacEwan Open Journals (MacEwan University)
op_collection_id ftmacewanuojs
language English
description In the year 1938 there appeared, in a German academic journal on psychology, an article describing a series of twenty—two lucid dreams experienced by Harold von Moers-Messmer.In his dream life Moers—Messmer exhibits an unusually observant, objective, experiment—minded personality. Many of his experiences are typical —the incongruous detail that alerts one to the dream state, the brightly colored environment, the prickling sensation (“like dipping one’s arm into a bath of carbonic acid bubbles” says the doctor), and the ability to fly.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Gilmore, Edith
spellingShingle Gilmore, Edith
Lucidity and Reading: A German Lucid Dreamer’s Report
author_facet Gilmore, Edith
author_sort Gilmore, Edith
title Lucidity and Reading: A German Lucid Dreamer’s Report
title_short Lucidity and Reading: A German Lucid Dreamer’s Report
title_full Lucidity and Reading: A German Lucid Dreamer’s Report
title_fullStr Lucidity and Reading: A German Lucid Dreamer’s Report
title_full_unstemmed Lucidity and Reading: A German Lucid Dreamer’s Report
title_sort lucidity and reading: a german lucid dreamer’s report
publisher Lucidity Letter
publishDate 1983
url https://journals.macewan.ca/lucidity/article/view/606
genre Carbonic acid
genre_facet Carbonic acid
op_source Lucidity Letter; Vol. 2 No. 3 (1983)
op_relation https://journals.macewan.ca/lucidity/article/view/606/520
https://journals.macewan.ca/lucidity/article/view/606
op_rights Copyright (c) 2016 Lucidity Letter
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